As China struggled to redefine itself at the turn of the twentieth century, nationalism, religion, and material culture intertwined in revealing ways. This phenomenon is evident in the twin biographies of North China's leading Catholic bishop of the time, Alphonse Favier (1837-1905), and the Beitang cathedral, epicenter of the Roman Catholic mission in China through incarnations that began in 1701. After its relocation and reconstruction under Favier's supervision, the cathedral--and Favier--miraculously survived a two-month siege in 1900 during the Boxer Rebellion. Featuring a French Gothic Revival design augmented by Chinese dragon-shaped gargoyles, marble balustrades in the style of Daoist and Buddhist temples, and other Chinese aesthetic flourishes, Beitang remains an icon of Sino-Western interaction. Anthony Clark draws on archival materials from the Vatican and collections in France, Italy, China, Poland, and the United States to trace the prominent role of French architecture in introducing Western culture and Catholicism to China. A principal device was the aesthetic imagined by the Gothic Revival movement of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the premier example of this in China being the Beitang cathedral. Bishop Favier's biography is a lens through which to examine Western missionaries' role in colonial endeavors and their complex relationship with the Chinese communities in which they lived and worked.
Author(s): Anthony E. Clark
Publisher: University of Washington Press
Year: 2020
Language: English
Pages: 240
City: Seattle
Cover
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Foreword: Pointing Heavenward—A Religious Architecture for China
Preface
Chronology of Alphonse Favier’s Life
Introduction: The Crown and Cross in France and China
Chapter 1. The Civilizing Mission: A French Church on Chinese Soil
Chapter 2. The Fruits of Diplomacy: Building a Genteel Empire
Chapter 3. Competing Shadows: Beijing’s First North Church
Chapter 4. China Gothic: Alphonse Favier’s North Church
Chapter 5. The Contours of Reconstruction: Favier and the French Mission
Chinese Character Glossary
Notes
Bibliography
Index